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Role of Ion Fluxes During Regeneration


PROJECT INVESTIGATORS


Michael Levin, PhD.
Tufts University

Dany Adams
Tufts University

Sherry Aw
The Forsyth Institute & Harvard U.


Cynthia Hsu
The Forsyth Institute & Harvard U.

Nester Orviedo
The Forsyth Institute & Harvard U.

Peter Walentek
The Forsyth Institute & Harvard U.

Description:

Regeneration is a key goal of medicine, as it bears on therapies for injuries, birth defects, cancer, and aging. Using a variety of molecular tools, we are investigating the ability of certain animals (planarian flatworms and Xenopus tadpoles) to regenerate central nervous system cells. We have discovered that wound cells rapidly up-regulate the expression of specific ion channels and ion pumps, and that their bioelectric activity is crucial for the regeneration of nerve, muscle, and other cell types. The ability to understand the biophysical properties of the wound currents are crucial to future biomedical approaches (aimed to induce regeneration of damaged tissues in humans), and we depend on the BRC for the technology necessary to characterize wound currents and the bioelectrical action of cell recruitment and tissue regeneration.

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